Clinical impact of primary tumor sidedness and sex on unresectable post-recurrence survival in resected pathological stage II-III colorectal cancers: a nationwide multicenter retrospective study

Background Several studies have demonstrated that right-sided tumors have poorer prognosis than left-sided tumors in patients with unresectable colorectal cancer (CRC). The predictive ability of the tumor sidedness in CRC treated with chemotherapy in each sex is unclear. Methods Subjects were 964 unresectable recurrent patients treated with chemotherapy with stage II-III CRC after curative resection between 2004 and 2012. Post-recurrence cancer-specific survival (CSS) for each sex was examined. Results Patients were 603 males (222 right-side tumors (cecum to transverse colon) and 381 left-sided tumors (descending colon to rectum)), and 361 females (167 right-side tumors and 194 left-sided tumors). Right-sided tumors developed peritoneal recurrences in males and females. Left-sided tumors were associated with locoregional recurrences in males and with lung recurrences in females. Right-sided tumors were associated with shorter post-recurrence CSS in both sexes. In males, multivariate analyses showed that right-sided tumors were associated with shorter post-recurrence CSS (HR: 1.53, P < 0.0001) together with the presence of regional lymph node metastasis histopathological type of other than differentiated adenocarcinoma, the recurrence of liver only, the recurrence of peritoneal dissemination only, and relapse-free interval less than one-year. In females, multivariate analyses showed that right-sided tumors were associated with shorter post-recurrence CSS (HR: 1.50, P = 0.0019) together with advanced depth of invasion, the presence of regional lymph node metastasis, and recurrence of liver only. Conclusions Primary tumor sidedness in both sexes in unresectable recurrent CRC patients treated with chemotherapy may have prognostic implications for post-recurrence CSS. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12885-022-09615-z.


Introduction
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common malignancies and most frequent causes of cancer-related death worldwide [1]. In order to decide personalized

Study population
A total of 22,638 patients' data were collected by The Japanese Study Group for Follow-Up of Colorectal Cancer. All patients had pathologically diagnosed stage II-III colorectal cancer and underwent curative surgery at 24 Japanese referral hospitals between January 2004 and December 2012. Inclusion criteria were recurrent disease after curative resection of the primary tumor and received chemotherapy, which was not palliative, without resection of recurrent tumor. Exclusion criteria included: histology other than adenocarcinoma, hereditary disease, inflammatory bowel disease, multiple colorectal cancers, multiple primary tumors, insufficient clinical and pathological information, unknown stage information, and unknown follow-up information. This study was approved by the Central Institutional Review Board (Tokyo Medical and Dental University [No. M2017-268]) and the Ethics Review Board of each institution, including the ethics committees of the University of Tokyo (No.3252- [13]).

Patient follow-up
Patients underwent postoperative surveillance at 3-month intervals after surgery according to the surveillance protocol, as described previously [9,13]. Regular tumor marker assessment of serum carcinoembryonic antigen and carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (every 3 months), computed tomography scans (every 6 months), and colonoscopy examinations (every year) were performed for 5 years postoperatively. Follow-up data were recorded until the study cutoff date of January 2019. Patient data were extracted from the prospectively generated database of each institute and analyzed retrospectively.

Data selection
Patients were divided into two groups according to tumor location (right-sided tumor or left-sided tumor). A right-sided tumor was defined as a tumor of the cecum, ascending colon, or transverse colon. A left-sided tumor was defined as a tumor of the descending colon, sigmoid colon, or rectum. The following clinical factors were assessed using medical records: sex, age, treatment year, primary tumor location, histological type, pathological TNM classification, stage (American Joint Committee on Cancer classification), and the presence of adjuvant chemotherapy. The site of recurrence and treatment strategy was also included for patients with recurrence.

Statistical analysis
Clinicopathological features were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney U-test for continuous variables or the chi-square test for categorical variables. Overall survival (OS) was determined using the records from surgery date to death or last follow-up. Post-recurrence cancerspecific survival was defined using the records from recurrence after radical surgery for the primary tumor to cancer-specific death or last follow-up. Post-recurrence cancer-specific survival was analyzed using Kaplan-Meier survival curves and log-rank tests. Predictive factors for post-recurrence cancer-specific survival were assessed using: primary tumor location (left vs. right), age (< 75 years vs. ≥ 75 years), depth of invasion (T1-3 vs. T4), lymph node metastasis (absent vs. present), adjuvant therapy (present vs. absent), histopathological type (differentiated vs. others), and relapse-free interval (< 1 year vs. ≥ 1 year). Variables with a P-value of < 0.1 in the univariate analyses were further evaluated using the Cox proportional hazards model to determine the predictive factors. Data analyses were performed using JMP Pro 16.0 software (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). A P value < 0.05 was considered significant.

Patient characteristics
The present study cohort comprised 964 patients with colorectal cancer, including 603 male patients and 361 female patients (Fig. 1)  Male patients showed significant differences in depth of invasion, recurrence in peritoneal dissemination only, and locoregional only between the groups. Males with right-sided tumor were more likely to have T4 cancer and have recurred with peritoneal dissemination only, and less likely to have recurred with locoregional only.
On the other hand, significant differences in female patients were observed in age, depth of invasion, recurrence in lung metastasis only, peritoneal dissemination only, and bone metastasis only between the groups. Females with right-sided tumor were more likely to be older, have T4 cancer, and have recurred with peritoneal

Post-recurrence cancer-specific survival
The median follow-up period was 43.0 months, and the 5-year overall survival (OS) and post-recurrence cancerspecific survival (CSS) were 38.3 and 19.4%, respectively (data not shown). The OS and post-recurrence CSS of the entire cohort, stratified by tumor location. The 5-year OS of patients with left-sided tumor and right-sided tumor were 45.1 and 31.2%, respectively (P < 0.0001). Moreover, the 5-year post-recurrence CSS of patients with left-sided tumor and right-sided tumor were 29.1 and 15.8%, respectively (P < 0.0001). Furthermore, we investigated the prognostic capability of sex in these survival curves. Tumor location stratified OS and post-recurrence CSS curves in male and female patients. The survival curves were more clearly stratified in male patients than in female patients (Fig. 2).

Post-recurrent cancer-specific survival stratified by tumor location according to recurrence site
Metastatic organ site is a potent prognostic factor; thus, we focused on the differences in organ-specific survival rate in post-recurrent CCS in each sex.

Discussion
The present study analyzed post-recurrence CSS in pathologically diagnosed stage II-III colorectal cancer, focused on sex and recurrence sites. Multivariable analysis showed that post-recurrence CSS was significantly lower in those with right-sided tumor among both male and female patients. Thus, primary tumor location should be considered for treatment strategy and clinical practice, regardless of sex.
In the present study, the recurrence-free interval in each organ was different, the intervals of liver metastasis and anastomotic site recurrence were shorter than other metastatic sites. The recurrence-free interval in each organ in the present study was shorter than a previous study [25]. An unresectable recurrent status may be more aggressive than a resectable recurrent status because short recurrence-free survival, especially shorter than 1 year, was demonstrated to be a negative predictive factor for several malignancies including colorectal, rectal, and gastric cancer [25][26][27].
In the present study, CSS after recurrence depended on recurrent organs, which was in line with a previous study [28]. However, the recurrence pattern among male and female patients has not been fully investigated in a large cohort. A previous study demonstrated that right-sided tumors had more favorable peritoneal recurrence compared with left-sided tumors [9,29], this study also found the same trend in both sexes. Locoregional recurrence was observed more frequently in left-sided tumors in males. Anastomotic leakage after colorectal surgery increases mortality, and males and rectal cancer have been reported to be risk factors due to the smaller pelvis and more substantial muscular wall in males in a large cohort study, which is supportive to our results [30]. The recurrence ratio in lung was higher in left-sided tumors among females, which is in line with previous large cohort studies [31,32], and being female was the only adverse prognostic indicator for the development of lung metastasis [32].   Several factors have been proposed to affect survival between right-sided and left-sided tumors. First, the proximal colon from the cecum to two-thirds of the oral side of the transverse colon (right-sided) is derived from the embryonic midgut, and the distal third of the transverse colon to the rectum (left-sided) is derived from the embryonic hind-gut [21]. Second, their function is different as the right-sided colon mainly absorbs water, whereas the left-sided colon facilitates the passage of bowel contents. Third, there was a difference in gut microbiota composition. Prevotella, Pyramidobacterium, Selenomonas, and Peptostreptococcus were identified at relatively higher abundance in right-sided CRC, whereas Fusobacterium, Escherichia/Shigella, and Leptotrichia were relatively abundant in left-sided CRC [33]. Fusobacterium nucleatum was reported to promote chemoresistance by modulating autophagy [34]. Fourth, there are genetic differences between right-sided and left-sided tumors, such as KRAS, BRAF, microsatellite instability (MSI), and TP53, and their prevalence are associated with sex [35,36]. KRAS mutation and BRAF V600E mutation are associated with a poor prognosis, as they are predictive markers of resistance to epidermal growth factor-targeted antibodies [37,38]. Furthermore, BRAF mutation was observed more frequently in females and proximal tumors [22]. MSI-high cancer is associated with the proximal colon and females, and is a predictive marker for fluoropyrimidine/oxaliplatin first-line chemotherapy [23]. Significantly, the rates of TP53 mutations increase as they are located distally [39], and TP53 mutation is more frequent in sporadic cancers among males than females [24]. Metastatic CRC patients with TP53 mutation who received chemotherapy had shorter survival [40]. These findings suggest that tumor-specific molecular changes are different among tumor locations as well as between the sexes.
Tumor-specific molecular changes and different biological molecular factors between males and females likely affect the chemotherapeutic effect. Sex differences contribute to innate and adaptive immunological responses, and several factors, including hormonal mediators, sex chromosomes, metabolic and bacterial mediators, and environmental mediators, influence the development process of the malignancies and therapeutic response of anticancer drugs [41]. A large population-based study demonstrated that females were an adverse independent predictor of survival in colon, rectal, and other cancers [42]. Another reason is that sex is related to differences in the toxicity of chemotherapeutic agents. Females are likely to experience severe toxicity with fluorouracilbased chemotherapy and oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy [43][44][45]. However, several recent large-scale studies demonstrated that females had significantly improved survival while experiencing more gastrointestinal toxicities in oesophagogastric cancer, lung cancer, and Hodgkin's lymphoma [46][47][48].
These reports motivated us to investigate our hypothesis that the chemotherapeutic effects were affected by tumor location and sex. Our findings reveal that primary tumor sidedness is a promising prognostic indicator, regardless of sex, for unresectable colorectal cancer treated with chemotherapy. Our findings suggest that although sex differences may have contributed to treatment efficacy, the clinical implication was likely to be less than primary tumor-sidedness in clinical use. Further investigations into the associations between sex and molecular markers, including RAS, BRAF, and MSI, are needed. This study has several limitations due to its retrospective nature. First, due to the 9-year study period, treatment strategies, such as chemotherapeutic regimens, have changed; thus, this study may not be fully reflective of current medical practice. Second, medical records about detailed treatment strategies, including chemotherapy regimen and dose and adverse events, were not obtained. Treatments for recurrence may have been based on the Japanese Society for Cancer of the Colon and Rectum (JSCCR) Guidelines 2005 for treatment of colorectal cancer [49]. First-line therapy may have been mostly L-OHP or CPT-11-based regimen; however, this study lacks these data, which may influence the results. Third, no data were available regarding molecular marker statuses, including RAS, BRAF, MSI, and TP53, which could potentially explain the prognostic differences between right-sided and left-sided tumors. Nevertheless, the present study is the first to demonstrate that tumor sidedness is an independent prognostic factor for unresectable recurrent colorectal cancer regardless of treatment strategy.

Conclusions
Our findings demonstrated that right-sided tumors were associated with shorter cancer-specific survival than left-sided tumors; thus, tumor-sidedness should be considered a stratification parameter in further studies for recurrent unresectable CRC.